The annular eclipse was visible from a narrow track across Australia,
with clear weather reported at most sites. I was at a site in
Greenough, Western Australia (pronounced "gren-uf"), organized by the
Perth Observatory, a state-funded observatory headed by Dr. James
Biggs, Government Astronomer for Western Australia. A busload of
people travelled 5 hours north of Perth in a group headed by Peter
Birch of the Observatory staff.

The site was at an hundred-year-old inn, where lunch and facilities
were made available. Before lunch, I gave a brief lecture on annular
eclipses. Also at the site were: Olivier Staiger,
who had his
Web site
on line live; Lawrence Cram, professor of Astronomy at the
University of Sydney, with his wife Barbara;
Fred Espenak, the
astronomer from NASA Goddard Space Flight Center who, on the side of
his main research, publishes the eclipse bulletins in the NASA
Reference Publication series and who carries out the main calculations
of eclipse circumstances and paths; Daniel Fischer, who
publishes an astronomy newsletter in Germany; and Friedrich Dorst, an
experienced eclipse observer from Germany.

The Observatory staff had telescopes set up with projected
solar images, showing images both on a screen behind one of the telescopes
and with a video projector on a wall.

The sky was completely clear, with not a single cloud visible,
for the entire three days I was in Western Australia. The partial phases
were noticeable within seconds of the predicted time. Our site was about
3 km north of the predicted centerline.

As always at an annular eclipse, it became clear from the
final solar crescents that the moon wasn't big enough to cover the sun.
However, since 99% of the sun's diameter was to be covered, this fact wasn't
obvious until minutes before annularity.

Baily's beads began to be visible at the edge of the sun.

Annularity lasted only about 40 seconds.

As always, my photographic experiences were a good test of some of the equipment
I will use at the August 11, 1999, total solar eclipse, which we hope to observe
from Romania. Some repairs and changes in camera equipment will be required.
Pinhole images were naturally visible on walls of the inn, and were also artificially
made.

The Australian broadcast network ABC was there, and I unfortunately overheard
them issuing excessive warnings about eye safety (See
my article on Public Education and Eclipses in New Trends in Astronomy Teaching,
an International Astronomical Union Colloquium.). My worry is that if students
are told that they should stay indoors and watch on tv because they will hurt
their eyes if they look at the sun, they will find out that friends watched
the eclipse from outdoors or even just had their gaze glance across the sun
in the sky, and will then not trust teachers or television when they are warned
about other hazards of life (smoking, drugs, AIDS, etc.). So the excessive warnings
can wind up being harmful for people. It is important at future eclipses for
knowledgeable people to give the proper warnings about how to watch the observe
safely.

Perth is a very modern city, very changed since our visit there for the total
solar eclipse of June 1974. At the edge of the central business district, some
of the older buildings also survive.

En route home, we went via Sydney. Its Opera House and its zoo are among its
outstanding features. The International Astronomical Union will meet there in
July 2003.

I heard from Robert Eather, who made an IMAX movie of the annular eclipse,
that Tennant Creek, much farther east in Australia, was clear for the annularity,
and only a small part of the partial phases were blocked from view. Another
observer at Tennant Creek was Patrick Poitevin.

Jay M. Pasachoff

Chair, Working Group on Eclipses of the International Astronomical Union